Boy, 10, dies after being beaten to death by headmaster in front of whole school

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KHYALMAT KHAN WAS BEATEN TO DEATH BY HIS HEADTEACHER. 12:34, 01 Jun 2025 A 10-year-old boy has tragically died after his headteacher beat him to death in front of the entire school. Year 6


pupil Khyalmat Khan was mercilessly hit with a rod by headmaster Waqar Ahmed at a private school in northern Pakistan yesterday, passing away from his injuries mere hours later in hospital.


According to local police reports, Khyalmat was pulled out during assembly, taken before his peers and struck on the head, face, and back. Witnesses claimed the harsh punishment was for a


'minor' mistake. Following the incident, the headteacher was detained, with an investigation into the tragic event now underway. The harrowing ordeal took place in Jamrud, within


Pakistan's Khyber tribal district, reports the Mirror. Speaking about the tragedy, Khyber District Police Officer Rai Mazhar Iqbal declared: "Violence against children and women


will not be tolerated under any circumstances." He further stated: "No one has the right to misuse the noble role of a teacher to commit such brutality. A teacher is a spiritual


guardian, but this man has dishonoured the sanctity of the profession." Article continues below _JOIN THE __DAILY RECORD'S WHATSAPP COMMUNITY HERE__ AND GET THE LATEST NEWS SENT


STRAIGHT TO YOUR MESSAGES._ Despite the ban on corporal punishment enacted in Pakistan in 2021 following several high-profile cases of fatal beatings in schools, workplaces, and religious


institutions, it appears some educational establishments continue to practise it. Pakistan has the world's second-largest number of children out of school, estimated at around 24


million, with many citing beatings by teachers as their main reason for staying away. Campaigners speak out, among them former lawmaker Mehnaz Akber Aziz, who last month emphasised that


Pakistan needs "a comprehensive set of measures" to eradicate corporal punishment nationwide, noting that "laws alone are not enough". She suggested the implementation of


public education campaigns, teacher training and child helplines as strategies to deter the use of physical punishment in schools. In The News, Ms Aziz remarked: "School should be a


place of hope and opportunity, where children are safe to learn and develop the skills and experiences they need to thrive." Stressing the urgency of the matter, she continued:


"Corporal punishment is incompatible with that vision. Making the physical and degrading punishment of children unlawful should be central to the efforts to tackle illiteracy and


poverty." Tragic cases highlight the issue, such as in 2021, when an eight year old boy was allegedly beaten to death by his teacher for failing to memorise a lesson in Vehari city,


Punjab. And another harrowing incident in 2020 involved an eight year old girl working as a maid in Islamabad, who was beaten to death by her employers after accidentally freeing their pet


parrots. Article continues below _DON'T MISS THE LATEST NEWS FROM AROUND SCOTLAND AND BEYOND - SIGN UP TO OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER HERE._